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moistness

/moist/US // mɔɪst //UK // (mɔɪst) //

湿润度,湿度,保湿性,潮湿度

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1

    moist·er, moist·est.

    • : moderately or slightly wet; damp.
    • : tearful.
    • : accompanied by or connected with liquid or moisture.
    • : having high humidity.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Also, moist fingers won’t activate some screens, which might be frustrating if you’re in a wet situation and can’t immediately dry them.

  • If their flesh happens to be tender and — yes — moist, then it’s okay to just say so.

  • They’re extra moist, super easy to throw together, and make for great leftovers.

  • However, in the moist atmosphere between a person’s mouth and their mask, it takes nearly a hundred times as long for a droplet to evaporate and shrink into a droplet nuclei.

  • This helps to keep the eyes moist, washing away dust and anything dangerous.

  • Thousands of platinum-blonde manes brush against bare, perma-tanned backs moist with snow.

  • The moist emotions were at once staged for television and overpoweringly real.

  • The moist rectangle of cooked meat and molten blob of cheese are then layered in a hard roll.

  • Each firm, moist piece packs a provocative sweet and savory punch.

  • As a nasal spray it keeps the passages moist and bacteria free, ideal for travel or ducted heating systems.

  • It is more advantageous to pluck the leaves when they are dry than when they are moist.

  • Should it still be too moist to be sown, it must be again turned over, and mixed with some dry substance to absorb the moisture.

  • It should always be erected on dry ground, rather than upon moist, so that no dampness may arise and injure the leaves in curing.

  • Press the earth gently around the plant if the soil is moist, but if dry, more firmly.

  • For Connecticut seed leaf a light moist loam is the proper soil.